Azure status overview
The Azure status pane provides you with a global view of the health of Azure services and regions, along with service availability.
Anyone can visit the Azure status pane and view incidents related to all services that report service health and incidents with wide-ranging impact. However, we strongly encourage current Azure users to use the personalized experience in Azure Service Health. Service Health includes all outages, upcoming planned maintenance activities, and service advisories.
Azure status updates
The Azure status pane is updated in real time as the health of Azure services changes. If you leave the Azure status pane open, you can control the rate at which the pane refreshes with new data. At the top, you can see the last time the pane was updated.
Azure status banner
The status banner on the Azure status pane highlights active incidents that affect Azure services.
Current Impact tab
The Current Impact tab displays active events that affect the entirety of Azure. Use Service Health to view other issues that might be affecting your services.
Azure status history
Although the Azure status pane shows the latest health information, you can view older events by using the Azure status history pane. The Azure status history pane is used to provide Post Incident Reviews (PIRs) for Scenario 1 events.
Note
Post Incident Review (PIR) was previously called Root Cause Analysis (RCA).
RSS feed
You can also subscribe to the Azure status RSS feed to view changes to the health of Azure services.
When does Azure publish communications to the status pane?
We send most of our service issue communications as targeted notifications to affected customers and partners. These communications are delivered through Service Health in the Azure portal and trigger any configured Service Health alerts.
The public Azure status pane is used only to communicate about service issues that fall under the following three scenarios:
- Scenario 1: A service issue has broad/significant customer impact across multiple services that affect a full region or multiple regions. In Scenario 1 events, we notify you because customer-configured resilience like high availability/disaster recovery might not be sufficient to avoid impact.
- Scenario 2: A service issue impedes you from accessing the Azure portal or Service Health, and we're unable to contact you via our standard outage communications path.
- Scenario 3: A service issue has broad/significant customer impact, but we can't yet confirm which customers, regions, or services are affected. We can't send targeted communications, so we provide public updates.
What does Azure publish to the status history pane?
You can view older events by using the Azure status history pane. This pane contains PIRs for incidents that occurred on November 20, 2019, or later.
The Azure status history pane displays PIRs only for Scenario 1 events. We're committed to publishing PIRs publicly for service issues with the broadest impact, like issues with both multiple-service and multiple-region impacts. We conduct and publish PIRs to ensure that all customers and the industry at large:
- Can learn from our retrospectives on these issues.
- Can understand what steps we're taking to make such issues less likely and/or less impactful in the future.
During Scenario 2 and 3 events, we might communicate publicly on the Azure status pane as a workaround to reach affected customers when standard, targeted communication routes aren't available.
After a Scenario 2 or 3 issue is mitigated, we conduct a thorough impact analysis to determine which customer subscriptions were affected. We provide the relevant PIR only to affected customers via Service Health in the Azure portal.
Related content
- Learn how you can get a more personalized view into Azure health by using Service Health.
- Learn how you can get a more granular view into the health of your specific Azure resources by using Azure Resource Health.